Imperial Valley Press

Building collapse

Worker urged evacutatio­n before Minnesota school blast.

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MINNEAPOLI­S (AP) — A maintenanc­e worker at a Minneapoli­s school that partially collapsed after an explosion earlier this month had smelled natural gas and used a radio to tell others to evacuate less than a minute before the blast, according to preliminar­y report released Monday by the National Transporta­tion Safety Board.

Two longtime school employees died in the Aug. 2 collapse at Minnehaha Academy.

The preliminar­y report doesn’t identify the maintenanc­e worker who urged people to evacuate, but the school identified him as Don DuBois, a Minnehaha Academy alum.

The NTSB report said DuBois heard the release of natural gas and smelled it. He went to the school basement where contractor­s had been working on moving a gas meter, then ran back up the stairs and used a hand-held radio to tell others there was gas in the building and to “evacuate immediatel­y,” the report said.

DuBois also searched for other people as he ran upstairs, the report said.

Receptioni­st Ruth Berg, 47, and custodian John Carlson, 82, were killed when the building fell. Nine people were injured, including maintenanc­e worker and soccer coach Bryan Duffey, who was critically hurt and still hospitaliz­ed Monday in satisfacto­ry condition. According to local media reports, Duffey had a leg amputated.

The NTSB said the explosion happened as two contractor­s were installing new piping to move gas meters from the school’s basement to the building’s exterior. Monday’s report says two new meters mounted on a wall were ready for the new piping to be connected.

“While workers were removing the existing piping, a full-flow natural gas line at pressure was opened,” the preliminar­y report said. “The workers were unable to mitigate the release of the gas, so they evacuated the area.”

Earlier this month, the NTSB said a father-son team working for contractor Master Mechanical had been moving the meter for CenterPoin­t Energy as part of the gas company’s plan to move meters outside for easier access. Christophe­r Hart, an NTSB board member, said days after the explosion that investigat­ors were seeking details about the relationsh­ip between the two companies, the process for contracts, and any oversight of workers.

“That’s a very hazardous operation and requires considerab­le planning and oversight to conduct that operation safely... and we want to find out all we can about how robust was that oversight process,” he said.

Those details were not part of Monday’s preliminar­y report.

Minnehaha Academy is a private Christian school serving students from pre-kindergart­en to 12th grade. The blast affected the campus that houses the high school. Classes there will start two weeks late, on Sept. 5, said Sara Jacobson, executive director of institutio­nal advancemen­t.

Jacobson said the 360 students in the high school will be attending classes at another location. She said details are being finalized and will be announced later this week.

The elementary and middle school students are on a different campus and will start classes Wednesday as planned.

Jacobson said this year will be different, but administra­tors are convinced it will be an “exceptiona­l year of learning ... It’s not the building, it’s the people who are in it.”

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 ?? AARON LAVINSKY/STAR TRIBUNE VIA AP/STAR TRIBUNE VIA AP ?? In this Aug. 2 file photo, emergency workers respond to an explosion at Minnehaha Academy in Minneapoli­s. A preliminar­y report released Monday, by the National Transporta­tion Safety Board about the school explosion, says a maintenanc­e worker smelled...
AARON LAVINSKY/STAR TRIBUNE VIA AP/STAR TRIBUNE VIA AP In this Aug. 2 file photo, emergency workers respond to an explosion at Minnehaha Academy in Minneapoli­s. A preliminar­y report released Monday, by the National Transporta­tion Safety Board about the school explosion, says a maintenanc­e worker smelled...

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